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Originally Posted by welldone This is really interesting. The other day I went to a bank and wanted to break my $10 bill to 10 "$1" bills. Actually I felt it kind of hard to say "10 $1 bills". The lady teller was really nice. She helped me when I was still trying to mumbling out the sentence.
"Do you want me to break it to 10 singles?"
Yeah! That's what I wanted to say.
So, now I know $1 bill is just single.
I looked it up on our website here and found this:
$100 bill sleeve
$20 bill double
$50 bill nifty
Actually I didn't get many chances to hear people using them. Are they actually used in daily life at all? |
In AE, all bills can be called "greenbacks" (due to the color) or "dead Presidents" because of the portraits, even though Hamilton and Franklin were never President.
$1: single(s), one(s), buck(s), dollar(s)
$2: two(s)
$5: five(s), five spot(s), fiver(s)
$10: ten(s), ten spot(s), sawbuck(s)
$20: twenty(ies), double sawbuck(s)
$50: fifty(ies)
$100: hundred(s), c-note(s),
I've never heard "sleeve" or "nifty" for money.